Skyview Airport Lounge name confusion at MHH
Google “Skyview Airport Lounge MHH” and you’ll find hits, but Leonard M. Thompson International Airport in Marsh Harbour has no operating contract lounge under that name in 2024. This is a small Bahamian airport with a few gates serving carriers like American and Delta, so expectations should sit closer to basic seating and a snack bar than to a full Priority Pass setup. If your flight leaves in the afternoon bank, assume you’ll be killing time in the public gate area, not in anything called Skyview.
Inside the terminal, post‑security, you’ll see standard gate seating and one or two food counters, but nothing resembling a staffed lounge with day-pass pricing, bar lists, or posted hours like 06:00–21:00. No current lounge appears in Priority Pass, LoungeBuddy, or on major airline lounge maps for MHH, and FlyerTalk threads going back several years echo the same point: flyers connect through Nassau (NAS) or Miami (MIA) for lounge access, not Marsh Harbour itself.
If a ticketing agent, hotel, or third‑party site mentions “Skyview Airport Lounge day pass,” assume it’s either outdated marketing or confusion with another airport that actually has a Skyview-branded space. Regular lounge hallmarks – shower rooms, dedicated business desks, hot buffet lines, or premium drinks – simply don’t show up in recent Google Maps photos or traveler trip reports for Leonard M. Thompson International Airport. That matters if you’re planning a 3–4 hour layover and hoping to work online or feed a family without paying individual bar prices.
Watch out for nonrefundable lounge vouchers sold by packagers that list MHH and Skyview together; cross‑check the airport code and the lounge list on the issuer’s own site before handing over a card number. The practical move here: if lounge time is important, schedule your longer connection at NAS or a US hub and keep Marsh Harbour as a short hop with snacks handled before you land or after you depart.